WhirledViewtag:typepad.com,2003:weblog-754942018-10-01T05:00:00-06:00A Look at World Politics & Most Everything ElseTypePadtypepad/WhirledViewhttps://feedburner.google.comIt’s the Process, Stupidtag:typepad.com,2003:post-6a00d834515f8469e2022ad3934631200d2018-10-01T05:00:00-06:002018-09-22T14:11:04-06:00The cruel and unfair process to which Anita Hill was subjected has not been forgotten. However, there is little indication that the Republican members of the Judiciary Committee, some of whom participated in the lynching of Anita Hill, are inclined to be any more judicious in examining the allegations of Dr. Ford. They should think again. Accused and accuser must be treated with equal respect. Issues deserve thorough, opem-minded investigation. In short, the process as such is critical, whatever the outcome. If this inquiry is not seen to be far and thorough, the looming 2018 midterm elections are likely to tilt decisively toward Democrats.Patricia Lee Sharpe<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><p><strong>By Patricia L. Sharpe</strong></p>
<p>Esteemed Members of the Senate Judiciary Committee: as you prepare for this highly sensitive hearing, please try to remember that justice requires a fair process as much as an examination of facts. Whatever the outcome of your inquiry, you will suffer in the court of public opinion if you are not seen to conduct a thorough, fair-minded investigation into the validity of the charges against a Supreme Court nominee. The reputation of the court will also be compromised.</p>
<p><strong>He said, She said</strong></p>
<p>I do not know what happened on that terrible night so many years ago when a bunch of teens seem to have drank too much at a house party. I do not know if we will ever know for sure, even if both parties testify before a Senate committee next week, even if witnesses are called. Why? For one thing, there is no indication that the Republican members of the Judiciary committee intend to conduct themselves more honorably than they did in the Anita Hill case.</p>
<p>Judge Brett Kavanaugh's supporters, including the President, accuse the woman of keeping silence too long for credibility. Mr. Trump, who has plopped himself heavily on the scales of justice, needs to find other subjects to tweet about. It is now up to the Senate to evaluate his nominee's professional and personal qualifications. Nevertheless, the President has demanded a police report as proof that Dr. Christine Blasey Ford's was assaulted. </p>
<p><strong>To report or Not to Report</strong></p>
<p>As Mr. Trump would have learned, had he cared to do a little research, massive accumulations of data prove that young women, even today, are unlikely to tell any adult that they have suffered a violent sexual assault. The younger they are the less likely they’ll speak up, even to their mothers. Thirty years ago the zeitgeist always favored the alleged attacker over the alleged victim. The victim got the blame and the shame, and trying to report a rape in those days was almost as painful as the rape itself. To a marginally lesser extent, it still is. Most rapes go unreported. </p>
<p>Non-reporting is not evidence of non-rape.</p>
<p><strong>Down Memory Lane</strong></p>
<p>Those who wish to discredit Dr. Ford also cite memory problems. Incomplete recall. Inconsistency. Vagueness. Memory issues are vexing, but unsurprising. They also do not prove that the charges are fabricated.</p>
<p>In fact, a similar criticism might be directed at the accused. As strongly and perhaps sincerely as he maintains his innocence, isn’t it possible that he has suppressed his role in the attack? Allegedly he was drunk. Inebriation isn’t conducive to accurate, complete memory. In fact, the whole edifice of his current self-respect may very well rest on self-serving forgetfulness.</p>
<p><strong>Peas in a Pod</strong></p>
<p>We have here a politically-fraught tragedy involving two highly respected, middle-aged professionals. Let me repeat that: two highly respected professionals, two people with family members who love them and colleagues who trust them. By failing to acknowledge this equivalence between accuser and accused, the President and his allies have done their best to influence public opinion in Kavanaugh's favor, while demeaning the woman who dares to complain. Classic misogyny.</p>
<p>The cruel and unfair process to which Anita Hill was subjected has not been forgotten. Oddly enough, there is little indication that the Republican members of the Judiciary Committee, some of whom participated in the "lynching" of Anita Hill, are inclined to be any more judicious this time around.</p>
<p>They should think again. Accused and accuser must be treated with equal respect. Charges deserve thorough, objective investigation. In short, the process as such is critical, whatever the outcome. If justice continues to be an irrelevant consideration for the majority on the Judiciary Committee, the looming 2018 midterm elections are likely to tilt decisively toward Democrats.</p>
<p><strong>Please Read a Weightier "Open Letter" from the Yale Law Faculty to the Judiciary Committee</strong></p>
<p> </p>
<p class="aolmail_MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 7.5pt; line-height: 115.0%; background: white;"><span style="font-size: 12.0pt; line-height: 115.0%; font-family: Arial , sans-serif; color: #333333;">As the Senate Judiciary Committee debates Judge Brett Kavanaugh’s nomination, we write as faculty members of Yale Law School, from which Judge Kavanaugh graduated, to urge that the Senate conduct a fair and deliberate confirmation process. With so much at stake for the Supreme Court and the nation, we are concerned about a rush to judgment that threatens both the integrity of the process and the public’s confidence in the Court.</span></p>
<p class="aolmail_MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 7.5pt; line-height: 115.0%; background: white;"><span style="font-size: 12.0pt; line-height: 115.0%; font-family: Arial , sans-serif; color: #333333;">Where, as here, a sexual assault has been alleged against an individual nominated for a lifetime appointment in a position of public trust, a partisan hearing alone cannot be the forum to determine the truth of the matter. Allegations of sexual assault require a neutral factfinder and an investigation that can ascertain facts fairly. Those at the FBI or others tasked with such an investigation must have adequate time to investigate facts. Fair process requires evidence from all parties with direct knowledge and consultation of experts when evaluating such evidence. In subsequent hearings, all of those who testify, and particularly women testifying about sexual assault, must be treated with respect.</span></p>
<p class="aolmail_MsoNormal" style="margin-bottom: 7.5pt; line-height: 115.0%; background: white;"><span style="font-size: 12.0pt; line-height: 115.0%; font-family: Arial , sans-serif; color: #333333;">The confirmation process must always be conducted, and appointments made, in a manner that gives Americans reason to trust the Supreme Court. Some questions are so fundamental to judicial integrity that the Senate cannot rush past them without undermining the public’s confidence in the Court. This is particularly so for an appointment that will yield a deciding vote on women’s rights and myriad other questions of immense consequence in American lives.<br> </span></p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<p> </p></div><div class="feedflare">
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</div><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/typepad/WhirledView/~4/q7pPQaLyxG0" height="1" width="1" alt=""/>https://whirledview.typepad.com/whirledview/2018/10/its-the-process-stupid.htmlThe Latest Big Joke: Kavanaugh Wants Fair Playtag:typepad.com,2003:post-6a00d834515f8469e2022ad393fe96200d2018-09-26T05:00:00-06:002018-09-26T05:00:00-06:00There are plenty of qualified conservatives who have no need to repress memories of drunken lechery. If the Senators had proceeded with all DELIBERATE speed, they might have uncovered Kavanaugh’s unfitness in time for the President to find a nominee less in his own image. Now they have a problem—and it’s of their own making. They and Kavanaugh banked on a fast, not a fair, process.Patricia Lee Sharpe<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><p>By Patricia Lee Sharpe</p>
<p>Kavanaugh had no complaints about the lack of fair play when his Senate hearings were being accelerated at the speed of light to get him approved before the Republicans lost control of House and Senate.</p>
<p>He had no complaints when Democrats didn’t receive all documents relevant to evaluating his long career.</p>
<p>He didn’t complain when Democrats weren’t given time to digest the documents that were—oh! so reluctantly!—coughed up.</p>
<p>He didn’t complain when his opponent was smeared, as if her family couldn’t be hurt as deeply as his own.</p>
<p>He didn’t complain as the president continued to tip the scales in his favor.</p>
<p>Delving a bit, let’s recall that didn’t mind the gratuitous exhibition of intimate details during the investigation of a Democratic president, an investigation in which he played a major part.</p>
<p>He didn’t.....well, you get the point. So long as his nomination to the Supreme Court was being railroaded at express speed by ideologically sympathetic Senators, he was perfectly happy with a flawed, unfair process.</p>
<p>But then the dirt began to dribble out. One accuser. A second accuser. A supporter suddenly discovering that she’d been smeared in a yearbook by a cabal of future frat boys, whose despicable prep school behavior is gradually seeping out.</p>
<p>So now Brett Kavanaugh wants fair play!!!!</p>
<p>Good. Let’s give him a fair process. Let’s get all those documents on the table and give the Democrats time to study them. Perhaps they’ll show that he can responsibly exercise the duties of an Associate Justice of the Supreme Court. Perhaps they’ll show he’s an ideologue unfit for that honor.</p>
<p>But maybe all that review isn’t necessary. We now know that his character is seriously flawed. Not because he may have been a pig when he was in high school—and college. That could (almost) be excused, if he had, as they say, manned up and confessed to behavior he had, quite understandably, tried to forget.</p>
<p>On the other hand, there are plenty of qualified conservatives who have no need to repress memories of drunken lechery. If the Senators had proceeded with all DELIBERATE speed, they might have uncovered Kavanaugh’s unfitness in time for the President to find a nominee less in his own image. Now they have a problem—and it’s of their own making. They and Kavanaugh banked on a fast, not a fair, process.</p></div><div class="feedflare">
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</div><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/typepad/WhirledView/~4/ILyHUb5udCY" height="1" width="1" alt=""/>https://whirledview.typepad.com/whirledview/2018/09/the-latest-big-joke-kavanaugh-wants-fair-play.htmlHouse of Trump House of Putin – Book Review Essaytag:typepad.com,2003:post-6a00d834515f8469e2022ad369e4ff200c2018-09-09T15:42:17-06:002018-09-09T19:17:26-06:00The overall picture Unger portrays is one of the US president tethered to the Russian mafia which is tethered to Vladimir Putin and his Russian security services. The late Karen Dawisha described the Putin-oligarch-mafia connections accurately in her 2014 book Putin’s Kleptocracy: Who Owns Russia as a mafia state. . . .More importantly what makes this book worth reading is his careful assembling of the many pieces of this still unraveling story into a well written, searing and coherent fashion.Patricia H. Kushlis<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><p><strong>By Patricia H Kushlis</strong></p>
<p><a class="asset-img-link" href="http://whirledview.typepad.com/.a/6a00d834515f8469e2022ad3afc6e3200b-popup" onclick="window.open( this.href, '_blank', 'width=640,height=480,scrollbars=no,resizable=no,toolbar=no,directories=no,location=no,menubar=no,status=no,left=0,top=0' ); return false" style="float: left;"><img alt="House of Trump House of Putin untitled" class="asset asset-image at-xid-6a00d834515f8469e2022ad3afc6e3200b img-responsive" src="https://whirledview.typepad.com/.a/6a00d834515f8469e2022ad3afc6e3200b-200wi" style="width: 185px; margin: 0px 5px 5px 0px;" title="House of Trump House of Putin untitled"></img></a>The subtitle of Craig Unger’s new book <u>House of Trump House of Putin</u> is The Untold Story of Donald Trump and the Russian Mafia. Basically, Unger’s book explores the multi-faceted connections between Donald Trump, his family, his campaign committee, his personal lawyer and staff with members of the Russian mafia, government and its intelligence services well prior to and during the 2016 campaign.</p>
<p> I don’t see that Unger has revealed much new because almost all of the information he includes is well footnoted and available piecemeal in various media including in two of his own commentaries. But I certainly found information I had not come across before. More importantly what makes this book worth reading is his careful assembling of the many pieces of this still unraveling story into a well written, searing and coherent fashion.</p>
<p>The case he makes for these all too close ties is damming.</p>
<p>If anyone is still critical of the amount of time, Special Counsel Robert Mueller is taking to investigate and document the 1,000 piece or more jigsaw puzzle that composes Trump’s Russian connections, I think he or she should stop right now. Complex money laundering cases with lengthy histories just take time and fastidious research to put the parts together and connect the multitude of dots. </p>
<p><strong>Beginning at the beginning</strong></p>
<p>Unger identifies an incredibly complex relationship or series of intricate relationships beginning with Trump’s first visit to Moscow in 1987 if not beginning with his marriage in 1977 to Ivanka Trump, a Czech citizen who was working as a model in Canada and whose father was under surveillance by Czech intelligence. </p>
<p>Yes, Trump’s first Moscow visit took place during the Gorbachev years, a time when the US had begun to encourage American business and private contacts with Russians four years before the Soviet Union fell apart in 1991. Nevertheless, in this context, <strong>perhaps the most important thing to consider is that although Gorbachev represented a new form of Soviet leadership, the country’s security services continued to march to their own drumbeat</strong>: collecting and carefully filing away compromising information on potential foreign targets for possible future use. Men like Trump were part of their bread and butter. For those of us who served in the Soviet Union, the police state and its secret services targeted against visiting westerners were daily realities.</p>
<p><strong>The overall picture Unger portrays is one of the US president tethered to the Russian mafia which is tethered to Vladimir Putin and his Russian security services.</strong> The late Karen Dawisha described the Putin-oligarch-mafia connections accurately in her 2014 book <u>Putin’s Kleptocracy: Who Owns Russia</u> as a mafia state. </p>
<p>In a nutshell, if this sprawling tale can be condensed into a single nutshell, the Russian mafia was born and bred in Stalin’s gulags. Many of that future mafia were Russian Jews, discriminated against by Stalin. They had served prison terms in Siberia as a result. After Stalin’s death, the gulags were emptied and the former prisoners came home. But in reality, there was very little for the former Jewish prisoners to come home to especially since Jews continued to be heavily discriminated against in the Soviet Union - Stalin or not. </p>
<p>In the early 1970s they became some of the people that the Jackson-Vanik Amendment aided. This piece of legislation spurred the Soviets to issue exit permits to Jews and Armenians – the Jews to Israel and the Armenians mostly to the US - in return for enhanced trade. Many Russian Jewish emigres remained in Israel but some of them then emigrated to the US. In the US, the Russian Jewish mafia was concentrated in New York’s Brighton Beach whereupon they opened small scale businesses, got to know and became involved with Italian crime families and over time became conduits for incredible amounts of illicit cash flowing out of the Soviet Union and particularly Russia. The oligarchs needed places to park the money they had received from the cheap sales of Russian natural resources and the most legally opaque form of investment in both the US and the UK was real estate. </p>
<p><strong>Donald Trump - "The King of Debt's" re-entry</strong></p>
<p>Re-enter Donald Trump, a failed New York real estate developer with an enormous ego who had happened upon a simple but surprisingly effective financial model notes the author after his fourth bankruptcy.</p>
<p>“The King of Debt” was in desperate need of cash and the Russian oligarchs needed a place to launder their illicit fortunes in the West. A central player in this money laundering scheme appears to have been a now defunct real estate company called Bayrock LLC; and its collaboration with Trump became a match made in heaven. Trump’s name had brand value which he licensed to developers “who would do all the work and he could sit back and collect the royalties – often 18% of more.” (p. 125) As he marketed his Sunny Isles branded Florida apartments in Moscow, St Petersburg and other locations they were seemingly “designed to attract Russian organized crime money.” (p. 126) </p>
<p>As his son Donald Jr said at a Manhattan real estate conference in 2008, “In terms of high-end product influx into the US, Russians make up a pretty disproportionate cross-section of our assets. . . We see a lot of money pouring in from Russia.” (p. 153) That statement, in and of itself, should have raised all sorts of red flags.</p>
<p> Thus, in 2004 when Trump was about to hit rock-bottom, he rose from the dead as it were and was suddenly making large cash expenditures for golf courses, estates, and up market houses in the US and abroad by 2006. This spending spree continued at least into 2014.</p> His illicit participation in Russian money-laundering was well documented and reported in the Financial Times during the 2016 election campaign, but perhaps because it was behind a paywall, the FT reports failed to gain traction at the time. The Russian mafia links to Putin’s oligarchs had played a significant role in Dawisha’s book, published in 2014, but the Trump-Putin connection via the Russian mob just didn’t seem to dawn on, or phase, much of the GOP leadership and certainly not Trump’s poorly educated base who likely had no inkling – and still have no inkling – of its ramifications.
<p><strong>The Jewish Connection via Chabad</strong></p>
<p>What is less well known but reported in Unger’s book, is Putin’s decision to “bring together various Orthodox Jewish communities in Russia through a small Orthodox Hasidic sect known as Chabad” in 1999. (p. 115) as a way of keeping the oligarchs under his control – including Jewish ones. Unger describes the sect as a tiny-Brooklyn based ultra-right wing, fundamentalist Hasidic organization whose biggest donors included Lev Leviev an Israeli billionaire and Russian oligarch and Charles Kushner, Jared’s father. Jared and Ivanka are members of this sect. As it has turned out, this tiny sect has provided “some of the richest and most unexpectedly direct sets of connections between Putin and Donald Trump.” (p. 117) This brainchild – in the best Russian Tsarist- Boyar tradition - was one part of Putin’s ways of keeping the Russian oligarchs under his thumb as well as his likely participation in lucrative money laundering schemes himself.</p>
<p><strong>Felix Sater and Bay Rock LLC</strong></p>
<p>The fact that Bay Rock LLC, a real estate company staffed, owned and financed by Russian emigres with ties to the Kremlin, Russian intelligence and “possibly the mob” (p 128), had moved into the 24<sup>th</sup> floor of Trump Tower should also not go unnoticed. Felix Sater, who Trump has attempted to distance himself from but also at other times embraced, was its managing director. His father, Mikhail Sater (previously Sheferovsky), had ties to the Italian mob soon after arriving in the US and son Felix – whose sorted background has included serving time as a convicted felon, working for US intelligence as a stoolie – as well as via his lucrative money laundering activities through Bayrock. Not only was Sater, junior, a partner of Donald Trump but also a school friend of Michael Cohen, Trump’s personal lawyer until this past April. </p>
<p><strong>But with all his Russian connections and attractive branding, why then has Trump been unable to get a single Trump-Moscow project off the ground? Unger suggests that the answer is remarkably simple: “Laundering money for the wealthiest Russians means getting their money out of Russia-not putting more into it</strong>.” </p>
<p><strong>Moscow's Congressional Connections</strong></p>
<p>Trump, however, was not the only individual who profited from dirty Russian money and this may help explain the incurious reaction to the Mueller investigation on the part of too many Republicans politicians: By 2014, Unger points out, “many leaders of the Republican Party were effectively on the payroll of the Kremlin . . . using K Street Lobbyists to serve its agenda.” In 2016, “millions of dollars in Russian money was funneled to Senate majority leader Mitch McConnell and other high profile Republicans to finances GOP senatorial candidates.” (p. 216) “McConnell (who) took $2.5 million for his GOP Senate Leadership Fund . . . was the leading recipient.” Others included PACs for Senators Marco Rubio, Lindsey Graham, John McCain and Ohio Governor John Kasich. As Unger notes elsewhere although the Russians had ties to political consultants in three major campaigns – Trump, Clinton and Sanders, “The Russians always had more success with Republicans than Democrats, but it wasn’t for the want of trying.” (p. 231) This all without getting into possible links to the NRA, ties that Unger mentions briefly. </p>
<p><strong>Putin's political motives</strong></p>
<p>Unger’s saga does not stop here because he also reviews Putin’s political motives for intervening in the 2016 US elections, in the Brexit vote and in his financial and cyberwarfare support for ultra-right wing nationalist parties throughout Europe.</p>
<p> As is well known at least among those who remember the history of the past 30 years, Putin is on record as expressing his devastation by the downfall of the Soviet Union and its loss of empire at home and abroad, a fate which he blames on the US, the Europeans and western international institutions.</p>
<p>The expansion of NATO during the late 1990s and 2000s, the colored revolutions in the Caucasus that the Kremlin view as instigated and supported by the US in a drive to surround Russia with an alliance targeted against it and the 2014 Ukrainian revolution which ousted the corrupt president of Ukraine, Viktor Yanukovich and other Putin allies in Ukraine’s government was Putin’s last straw. Putin knew that he didn’t have the military strength to counter the West, so he resorted to cyberwarfare or “active measures” in Russian intelligence and military parlance. He also used American and British lone wolf political consultants – like Paul Manafort, Carter Page, and Rick Gates with close ties to the major campaigns to do his bidding.</p>
<p><strong>What's Next and Where Does the US Go From Here?</strong></p>
<p>The question now in Mueller’s court is to what extent others - including and especially members of the Trump family – are also implicated. The questions the US administration and members of Congress should be addressing far more effectively than is happening now, is how this form of irregular warfare can be countered, and how, if the Trump is shown to be a player in this scheme, he can be removed from office and how the holes in our political system that allowed him to be elected in the first place can be patched. </p>
<p>This is the existential crisis the US is facing and it can’t be swept under the carpet by a supine – and perhaps compromised Republican led Congress. </p>
<p><strong>Before you go:</strong> Don’t forget to read Unger’s short biographies of Trump’s 59 Russia Connections which follows the final chapter. It’s a handy, alphabetized list, useful for future reference. </p>
<p>Craig Unger, <strong>House of Trump House of Putin: The Untold Story of Donald Trump and the Russian Mafia</strong>, New York: Dutton, 2018. </p></div><div class="feedflare">
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</div><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/typepad/WhirledView/~4/Oxv77E44_LE" height="1" width="1" alt=""/>https://whirledview.typepad.com/whirledview/2018/09/house-of-trump-house-of-putin-book-review-essay.htmlIf it’s Monday, It Must Be Helsinki tag:typepad.com,2003:post-6a00d834515f8469e2022ad3a0f3fc200b2018-07-15T13:19:01-06:002018-07-15T20:23:14-06:00On Monday, July 16, Donald Trump is scheduled to meet one-on-one with Russian Federation president Vladimir Putin. I could suggest that Trump is salivating for this meeting on the Baltic although why he wants it so much, remains unclear. Is it the prestige of meeting face to face in an hour long meeting a deux with another male autocrat for whom he has a special affinity?
It doesn’t take that long for a photo op after all.
Normally, as former Ambassador Nicholas Burns observed in a PBS Newshour interview Friday evening, the principals are well prepared and the topics of such meetings are clearly defined and set out in advance.Patricia H. Kushlis<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><p><strong>By Patricia H Kushlis</strong></p>
<p><a class="asset-img-link" href="http://whirledview.typepad.com/.a/6a00d834515f8469e2022ad35b4121200c-popup" onclick="window.open( this.href, '_blank', 'width=640,height=480,scrollbars=no,resizable=no,toolbar=no,directories=no,location=no,menubar=no,status=no,left=0,top=0' ); return false" style="float: left;"><img alt="Presidential Palace Helsinki" class="asset asset-image at-xid-6a00d834515f8469e2022ad35b4121200c img-responsive" src="https://whirledview.typepad.com/.a/6a00d834515f8469e2022ad35b4121200c-200wi" style="width: 185px; margin: 0px 5px 5px 0px;" title="Presidential Palace Helsinki"></img></a>On Monday, July 16, <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/2018_Russia%E2%80%93United_States_summit">Donald Trump is scheduled to meet one-on-one with Russian Federation president Vladimir Putin. </a> I could suggest that Trump is salivating for this meeting on the Baltic although why he wants it so much, remains unclear. Is it the prestige of meeting face to face in an hour long meeting a deux with another male autocrat for whom he has a special affinity?</p>
<p>It doesn’t take that long for a photo op after all. </p>
<p>Normally, as former Ambassador Nicholas Burns observed in a PBS Newshour interview Friday evening, the principals are well prepared and the topics of such meetings are clearly defined and set out in advance.</p>
<p>When President George H W Bush met with Mikhael Gorbachev his Soviet counterpart in Helsinki September 9, 1990 in the very same location – the Presidential Palace near Senate Square – Bush knew in advance what the topic would be - in fact he had called the meeting - and also knew what he wanted out of it: the topic then was Iraq’s illegal invasion and occupation of Kuwait and Bush wanted Gorbachev’s support, if not just his tacit approval, to launch an invasion of multilateral forces to expel Saddam Hussein’s troops from the country. Bush got what he wanted. </p>
<p>But what does Trump want from a meeting with Putin aside from a photo op and a pat on the back? Kudos for bashing NATO and insulting German President Angela Merkel and British Prime Minister Teresa May? Bravos for kicking up sand in the Alliance’s face and interfering in British domestic politics in support of the hardline Brexiteers who are May’s primary opposition? Another chance to insult the EU? A pay raise from his ultimate paymaster? </p>
<p><strong>We know that the Kremlin has a well defined foreign policy.</strong> It is revisionist; revanchist and aggressive. Putin and his oligarchs see the US and Western Europe as major impediments to the Kremlin's ambitions and are using cyber warfare all too effectively to achieve their aims. Putin’s policy demands a restoration of the borders of an almost mythical Russia with territory that extends far into Russian speaking lands extending well beyond the largest borders ruled by the Czars.</p>
<p>International recognition of Russia's incorporation of Crimea is the first step; Eastern Ukraine will be next along with <a href="https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Russo-Georgian_War#Recognition_of_Abkhazia_and_South_Ossetia_by_Russia">the breakaway statelets of Abkhazia and South Ossetia in Georgia that the Russian military wrested from its neighbor summer 2008</a> but that no one else in the international community has recognized a decade later.</p>
<p><strong>Is Trump prepared to agree? <br></strong></p>
<p>He's demonstrated time and again his lack of diplomatic negotiating skills. His foreign affairs background is exceedingly weak, he never prepares and he's far too conceited to agree to including advisors who actually know the subjects to be raised into such high stakes meetings.</p>
<p>Is he going to agree to a lifting of the economic sanctions on Russia imposed by the Obama administration in retaliation for Russia’s invasion of Ukraine in 2014? This is what Susan Rice, Obama’s former National Security Advisor, fears will happen behind those closed doors in Helsinki. She argues that “at the behest of his favorite foreign partners – Israel, the UAE and Saudi Arabia – Mr Trump has been encouraged to trade recognition of Russian annexation of Crimea and the termination of sanctions imposed on Russia after its invasion of Ukraine, for Russia’s pledge to curtail Iranian influence in Syria and the region.” And for what in return? If this is the outcome, what would the US get out of it and what would be the repercussions? Rice could be right.</p>
<p>And by the way, whatever happened to Reagan’s “trust but verify?” </p>
<p>Now, on top of this, the Mueller investigation took Russia’s interference in the 2016 US elections at least one step further. On Friday, while Trump was drinking tea with Queen of England, the Mueller investigation announced it had charged 12 active duty officers of the GRU, Russia’s military intelligence of conspiracy to interfere in the US campaign through cyber warfare attacks on the Democratic Party, its officials and staff, as well as state and local election websites. These fishing expeditions were made all on behalf of assisting Mr. Trump's election. The investigation also charged the GRU -12 with contacts with at least two unidentified Americans to share the stolen information – one American with close connections to the Trump campaign (read Roger Stone who has already admitted as much) and the other running for Congress. </p>
<p>I tend to think that the tight-lipped highly professional Mueller investigation runs on its own schedule and we know that Mueller, in all fairness, notified Trump before his departure for Brussels of the forthcoming charges so it should have come as no surprise to Trump that the indictments would be announced publicly while he was in Europe. </p>
<p>Nevertheless – as usual – Trump has continued to falsely accuse Mueller’s team of conducting a witch hunt, and I can only assume, therefore, that he will not raise the conspiracy charges with Putin on Monday, or if so, down play them as erroneous and inconsequential as opposed to praising Putin to the hilt. </p>
<strong>Trump’s transactional foreign policy continues</strong>
<p><a href="http://whirledview.typepad.com/whirledview/2018/06/transactional-diplomacy-trump-style.html">I’ve argued – and continue to think – that Trump’s approach to US foreign policy is foremost transactional.</a> By this I mean that it consists of transactions that enrich Trump at the expense of the nation he purportedly leads: he concedes American national interests for his own personal self-aggrandizement. Financing for another Trump hotel or golf course? Permission to build one or both in Moscow? For Trump, the presidency is a cash cow: his personal slot machine. </p>
<p><a class="asset-img-link" href="http://whirledview.typepad.com/.a/6a00d834515f8469e2022ad35b4152200c-popup" onclick="window.open( this.href, '_blank', 'width=640,height=480,scrollbars=no,resizable=no,toolbar=no,directories=no,location=no,menubar=no,status=no,left=0,top=0' ); return false" style="float: right;"><img alt="Senate Square Helsink 2011" class="asset asset-image at-xid-6a00d834515f8469e2022ad35b4152200c img-responsive" src="https://whirledview.typepad.com/.a/6a00d834515f8469e2022ad35b4152200c-200wi" style="width: 185px; margin: 0px 0px 5px 5px;" title="Senate Square Helsink 2011"></img></a>Meanwhile, when Trump and Putin enter the Finnish Presidential Palace on Monday, they might consider the fate of Russian Empire's Governor General Nikolai Bobrikov, a former resident, who was murdered in 1904 on the stairs of the then Senate and now Council of State building just around the corner on Senate Square. The assassin was Finnish nationalist Eugen Schauman who so strenuously objected to the Russification of Finland which Bobrikov had begun to implement with such vengeance that Schauman shot Bobrikov three times and then killed himself.</p>
<p>A plaque marks the location of the assassination. <a href="https://web.archive.org/web/20051128065024/http://www.helsinginsanomat.fi/english/article/1076153076611%20 ">Here's how it was described in the <em>Helsingin Sanomat</em>, Finland's leading newspaper, a century later: "</a>In the stairwell, set off by the building's red carpets and green walls, is a memorial plaque which states that Schauman was acting on behalf of his country: <em>Se Pro Patria Dedit." </em></p>
<p>I also remember being shown a dark stain on the floor not far from the main entrance. I was told that it was the blood of the Russian Governor General spilled just 13 years before the Russian Empire came to its ignominious end and Finland declared and gained its independence.</p>
<p>For Putin, that blood should suggest a cautionary note: the expansion of Empires into unfriendly territories is ultimately not good for the Empire’s or Emperor's own health; for Trump, well I leave it to you. </p></div><div class="feedflare">
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</div><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/typepad/WhirledView/~4/5gxGee_bLXI" height="1" width="1" alt=""/>https://whirledview.typepad.com/whirledview/2018/07/if-its-monday-it-must-be-helsinki.htmlTransactional Diplomacy Trump Styletag:typepad.com,2003:post-6a00d834515f8469e2022ad39b2e5d200b2018-06-22T13:18:41-06:002018-06-22T13:18:41-06:00Trump’s own brand of transactional diplomacy, however, is different. For him, it’s a narrow and personally based world view couched in bluster and incendiary Tweets sent at weird hours of the night but what’s different is that it’s not designed to further or even support US national goals and objectives – those don’t matter. Rather it’s designed to enrich Trump and/or his company and children personally.
Much diplomacy – especially bilateral - has its roots in transaction: the goal is to see that both countries maximize their objectives. Essentially, it’s ‘I’ll scratch your back if you scratch mine.’ But it’s government to government not government to the bank account of an individual official. That, however, is not how Trump operates.Patricia H. Kushlis<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><p><strong>By Patricia H Kushlis</strong></p>
<p>In May 2017, then Secretary of State Rex Tillerson told State Department staff in his first of few meetings with them that he preferred to operate along the lines of transactional diplomacy which subordinates American values to a form of foreign policy based on cash-register type one-on-one trades. This way, the US could deal with the “bad guys” without having to consider whether they represented countries with ethical governments or not. </p>
<p>During my own Foreign Service career, I certainly worked in countries where the rule of law was nonexistent and where the US needed to base its relationship with the government in question on a transactional form of diplomacy. But that’s not what Trump’s version of transactional diplomacy is all about. </p>
<p>The Soviet Union was one of those countries where I served but others were Thailand under the Thai military and Greece under the Colonels. Our cultural exchanges agreement with the USSR is the most compelling example: everything was quantified and codified down to the number of students and faculty each country sent on research trips to the lengths of their stay by exact numbers of days, the access they had to research materials and the locations they could visit. My job was to see that the Soviet bureaucracy kept its word. It was not easy but without the formal agreement the exchanges would not have happened. </p>
<p>Trump’s own brand of transactional diplomacy, however, is different. For him, it’s a narrow and personally based world view couched in bluster and incendiary Tweets sent at weird hours of the night but what’s different is that it’s not designed to further or even support US national goals and objectives – those don’t matter. Rather it’s designed to enrich Trump and/or his company and children personally.</p>
<p><strong>Much diplomacy – especially bilateral - has its roots in transaction:</strong> the goal is to see that both countries maximize their objectives. Essentially, it’s ‘I’ll scratch your back if you scratch mine.’ But it’s government to government not government to the bank account of an individual official. That, however, is not how Trump operates.</p>
<p><strong>Watch:</strong> every time US foreign policy – as defined by Trump – does not seem to make sense in terms of the overall US national interest - which is most of the time - there’s likely to be an under the table financial transaction which personally benefits Trump or possibly a member of his family.</p>
<p>We know, for instance, that Ukraine president Poroshenko paid over $400,000 for an Oval Office meeting with Trump just last year. The money went to Trump’s fixer Roger Cohen and some may have gone to Felix Sater, a pal of Cohen’s, who has been involved in connecting Trump and company to Russian oligarchs connected to Putin. What we don’t know is how much of the Ukrainian treasury Cohen passed on to Trump too: Hopefully the Southern District Court of New York is investigating the question.</p>
<p>Moreover, Ukraine apparently simultaneously agreed to sideline its investigation of Paul Manafort’s payoffs from pro-Russian sources. Perhaps part of the deal from the US SIDE also included anti-tank military equipment suddenly released to the Ukrainian armed forces by the Trump administration that the Obama administration had refused to send. Not bad for $400,000 or more – but that’s not how rules- based government operates. The Ukrainian funds should never have wound up in Cohen’s bank account. </p>
<p>There was also an Oval Office meeting earlier this year by the president of Uzbekistan. Supposedly that was to seal the deal on several deals that, in fact, had already been sealed. How much did that photo op cost the Uzbeks I wonder? Does anyone know? What did Trump get out of it?</p>
<p>Moving right along, the Chinese government has been playing Trump for all he’s worth since shortly after he entered the White House – first approving trade marks for Ivanka to manufacture and sell her apparel brand in China (the second tranche of 13 patents was approved just before the Trump-Kim photo op “summit”) to agreeing to finance the theme park, as a part of a the Lido resort complex to be built in Indonesia adjacent to a Trump Tower Hotel. The theme park’s cost to the Chinese is $500 million; its cozy location is surely designed to enhance the value and revenue of the hotel. Is this deal still on the table given Trump's tariff war against the Chinese?</p>
<p>In return for this Chinese largesse? Trump suddenly reversed his decision to enforce punitive US tariffs for the telecommunications company ZTE which the Trump administration has placed on certain Chinese goods and which, in the case of this company are forcing it into bankruptcy. The Senate may block the Trump flip flop on ZTE – which will complicate the matter if this happens, and who knows how this could affect Trump’s personal finances. ZTE, according to AP reporting, “is accused of violating trade laws by selling sensitive technologies to North Korea and Iran.” But the Senate is meeting with Trump to discuss the issue. Will that cave? And what's the payoff if so? </p>
<p>This makes me wonder what under the table deals were negotiated with the North Koreans for that feel good "meeting" with Kim shortly after the G6 plus 1. </p>
<p><strong>And in the Middle East,</strong> Trump’s abrupt withdrawal from the Iran nuclear deal, his support for the Saudi led war against Qatar and its bombing of the Shiites in Yemen combined with his decision to move the US Embassy to Jerusalem only make sense when viewed from the standpoint of at what benefit to Trump personally.</p>
<p>Here’s why. Trump’s biggest individual campaign backers were Adelman, the Koch Brothers, Singer and via Cambridge Analytica the Mercers – father and daughter. These same people are also big backers of the right wing, greater Israel policy of Netanyahu who vociferously opposed the Iran deal and has been itching to move the Israeli capital to Jerusalem for years all the while ignoring the rights of the Palestinians, rights that date back to the international recognition of the state of Israel in 1948.</p>
<p>And what have the Saudis gotten out of this – higher gas prices on the international market with Iran’s sales curtailed and yet additional military equipment from the US to wage more attacks on the Shiites in Yemen (although Trump’s advisors l-ikely including that ‘great’ foreign policy savant Jared Kushner - clearly forgot to tell him that we have important military bases in Oman and the US support for the Saudi blockade of that small Gulf country was in direct contradiction to our national interests.) An Oops moment. Clearly the US military was not amused.</p>
<p>What is still unclear is the nature of the relationship being brokered by Eric Prince (the brother of Education Secretary Betsy DeVos of Blackwater fame) and the Russian oligarchs and Donald Trump, Jr at a hotel in the UAE last fall. But it also seems to be a piece of the jigsaw. Did it relate to a potential hotel construction project to which Trump could affix his name and collect user fees? Or could money have changed hands under some table or even behind that weird green orb the Trump clan was photographed fondling May 2016 on their very first stop on their very first official overseas trip? </p>
<p>Nevertheless, perhaps this helps explain Trump’s rude behavior to the European, Canadian, and Japanese leaders at the G-7 (or maybe G-6 plus 1) meeting in Quebec June 9, his reneging on the joint statement and his acrimonious tweets about meeting host, Justin Trudeau, thereafter. These are rule of law countries, their leaders are not on the take and, therefore, Trump can’t shake them down. </p></div><div class="feedflare">
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</div><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/typepad/WhirledView/~4/jGVS95j0nFg" height="1" width="1" alt=""/>https://whirledview.typepad.com/whirledview/2018/06/transactional-diplomacy-trump-style.htmlThe Kremlinologist: A Book Review Essaytag:typepad.com,2003:post-6a00d834515f8469e20224df32277b200b2018-05-11T16:34:17-06:002018-05-11T16:37:20-06:00Much has been written about American Soviet experts George Kennan and Charles Bohlen but knowledge of their contemporary, the more reserved Llewellyn E. Thompson had all but disappeared from view until his daughters, Jenny and Sherry Thompson published his biography earlier this year – a work 15 years in the making. It is painstakingly researched and draws upon multiple, often primary, sources from now unclassified documents, diplomatic oral histories from the American Diplomatic Studies and Training collection, interviews with contemporaries as well as letters and photographs from their own personal archives – all coherently presented in a single 477 page volume plus copious end notes and a substantial bibliography that documents the meticulous work presented throughout the book.Patricia H. Kushlis<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><p><strong>By Patricia H Kushlis</strong></p>
<p><a class="asset-img-link" href="http://whirledview.typepad.com/.a/6a00d834515f8469e20224e0391317200d-popup" onclick="window.open( this.href, '_blank', 'width=640,height=480,scrollbars=no,resizable=no,toolbar=no,directories=no,location=no,menubar=no,status=no,left=0,top=0' ); return false" style="float: left;"><img alt="The Kremlinologist" class="asset asset-image at-xid-6a00d834515f8469e20224e0391317200d img-responsive" src="https://whirledview.typepad.com/.a/6a00d834515f8469e20224e0391317200d-200wi" style="width: 160px; margin: 0px 5px 5px 0px;" title="The Kremlinologist"></img></a><strong>Much has been written</strong> about American Soviet experts George Kennan and Charles Bohlen but knowledge of their contemporary, the more reserved Llewellyn E. Thompson had all but disappeared from view until his daughters, Jenny and Sherry Thompson published his biography earlier this year – a work 15 years in the making. It is painstakingly researched and draws upon multiple, often primary, sources from now unclassified documents, diplomatic oral histories from the American Diplomatic Studies and Training collection, interviews with contemporaries as well as letters and photographs from their own personal archives – all coherently presented in a single 477 page volume plus copious end notes and a substantial bibliography that documents the meticulous work presented throughout the book.</p>
<p>Shortly after I arrived in Moscow in 1978 to begin a two year stint as an Assistant Cultural Affairs Officer at the US Embassy, an American specialist on Russian history told me that to understand the Soviet Union I needed to understand the Russian Empire. That much of what masqueraded as part and parcel of the Communist system, in reality, often dated back to the Czarist period magnifying but also obscuring the country’s excesses, backwardness and insecurities shrouded in a powerful foreign ideology designed to promote world domination.</p>
<p><strong>I think today that this fundamental observation remains valid. </strong></p>
<p>To understand the Russian Federation we need to understand both of its predecessors. Although the ideological cloak of Communism has disappeared, the insecurities and the deep seated feelings of Russian inferiority to the West have brought a dangerous new form of ultra-nationalism to the fore something that Thompson, who had proposed Russian nationalism as a benign and more flexible substitute for a virulent Communist ideology, failed to foresee.</p>
<p>He was not alone and hindsight is, of course, often more accurate than foresight: it is far easier to predict what is, than to divine what will be. Regardless, Thompson understood the country and the Russians extremely well and provided a significant bridge between rigid Soviet leadership and a series of US Presidents over decades: all of whom needed to make policy decisions of international consequence. Neither side understood the other well which is why seasoned Soviet experts like Thompson were, and in my view, remain still crucial. </p>
<p>I think we also need to revisit the diplomatic path to place US-Russian relations in today’s context and Thompson’s biography provides a much needed and thoughtful link heretofore missing from the historical chain.</p>
<p><strong>In a nutshell,</strong> Thompson himself saw his role as an explainer of the Soviet system, the Russian people and the role of Communist ideology in the country’s foreign policy to a largely clueless American leadership. He also perceived his position as providing a personal bridge for US leaders to Soviet officials as he represented and explained US foreign policy interests and constraints. I think he fundamentally saw at the root of both US and Soviet policy interests the need to establish a peaceful form of coexistence through a network of nuclear arms control negotiations as well as by the expansion of people-to-people contacts to help allay misperceptions and misunderstandings that inevitably occur.</p>
<p>He also realized that when relations between the two countries’ officials had ebbed because of policy differences, bad timing, or misunderstandings that it was equally as important if not more so to maintain contacts with Russian intellectuals and artists not just because of their innate vibrancy and insights into the society but also because these were the people who would be the most likely to provide a moderating influence and, hopefully, usher in long term systemic change. </p>
<p><strong>In fact and much to his credit,</strong> the first of several US-USSR Cultural Exchange agreements was signed in 1957 when Thompson was Ambassador to Moscow, agreements that formed the foundation of people-to-people exchanges between Soviets and Americans until the end of the Soviet Union; and even after he retired in 1969 after forty years in the Foreign Service, he had been serving as a member of the US delegation on the SALT (Strategic Arms Limitation Talks) almost until his death. </p>
<p>Unlike most U.S. diplomats at the time, Thompson did not come from the East Coast elite. Perhaps this is why he communicated with Nikita Khrushchev so well: both had rural backgrounds and well understood the importance of agriculture and its unique challenges. Thompson was a Colorado rancher’s son who had graduated from the University of Colorado. He learned about a Foreign Service career by fluke from a retired US Consul while on a coastal steamer between Seattle and San Francisco.</p>
<p>As a result, Thompson went to Washington, DC and worked his way through the Georgetown University School of Foreign Service. He passed the Foreign Service exam, entered the service in 1929 and was assigned as vice consul in Ceylon. He was first assigned to Moscow in 1941, twelve years later, not long before the Germans laid siege on the Russian capital where he was one of only two employees left behind to staff the Embassy while everyone else was evacuated to the relative safety of Kuybyshev. His posting came with no training in Russian which he learned from the street, radio broadcasts, the Russian press and likely a Russian girlfriend – not considered a security problem at the time. </p>
<p>In total Thompson served in Moscow three times - the last two assignments as US Ambassador with his wife and children whom he had acquired several years after his first posting to Moscow. During his lengthy career, he had several other postings abroad and served as the consummate Soviet specialist at the State Department advising US Presidents and Secretaries of State on the Soviet Union and nuclear arms issues. He was also Under Secretary for Political Affairs, one of the department’s most senior and demanding positions. He had learned the art of international negotiation on the job beginning as a junior officer assigned first to the department and then Geneva working on international labor affairs. The skill stood his career well.</p>
<p><strong>A different Foreign Service life</strong></p>
<p>Thompson’s Foreign Service life was one where travel from one post to another or to and from Washington was far more leisurely than it became later - largely by ship, train or car - and where careers were not often abruptly terminated after 20-25 years of service but salaries were low and hard for officers not also supported by family wealth. Given the changes in the Foreign Service system ushered in in 1980, had he been in today’s service, he and other area experts like him might never have become Ambassadors, but the system worked differently in Thompson’s days and he ultimately did overcome the one major obstacle that had surreptitiously impeded his path for several years on his way to reach the heights of service to his country. </p>
<p><strong>An addendum: </strong> Thompson, a heavy smoker who also suffered from a stomach ulcer picked up while in Ceylon. He died of pancreatic cancer at a relatively young age as did his colleague Charles (Chip) Bolen. Jenny and Sherry Thompson point out that the issue of radiation from Soviet eaves-dropping equipment was raised by US security in conjunction with what turned out to be Nixon’s infamous “kitchen debate” visit to Moscow in August 1959. At that time the microwaves were bombarding Spaso House, their levels had spiked but the Soviets reduced the level in response to US complaints while Nixon stayed there. Yet, no one seemed to care after he left, and it is troubling that three US Ambassadors to Moscow (Thompson and Bohlen both died of pancreatic cancer at 68 and Walter Stoessel died of cancer at 67) – all at relatively young ages.</p>
<p>Furthermore, we know that the Embassy itself – particularly the higher floors - was bombarded by microwaves for years and staff were not warned until the information finally leaked to the media in the early 1970s whereupon by 1977 mesh screens were put on all Embassy windows which, we were told, cut the waves substantially. Moreover, since both governments knew that their facilities were bombarded with microwaves as early as 1959 (one official report 1953) , why did it take the US government years to own up to their existence? The State Department has still neither come to terms with the implications nor has it done requisite long term follow up studies to determine whether exposure to the waves has, in fact, caused higher rates of cancer in employees and families who served at the post especially those who lived or worked on the upper floors. </p>
<p><em>Jenny and Sherry Thompson, <u>The Kremlinologist: Llewellyn E Thompson, America’s Man in Cold War Moscow</u>, Baltimore: John’s Hopkins University Press, 2018</em></p></div><div class="feedflare">
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</div><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/typepad/WhirledView/~4/HD26T2G1-c8" height="1" width="1" alt=""/>https://whirledview.typepad.com/whirledview/2018/05/the-kremlinologist-a-book-review-essay.htmlNorth Korea, Iran and other thoughts on Trump’s Approach to Nuclear Proliferation Deals tag:typepad.com,2003:post-6a00d834515f8469e20223c8469914200c2018-04-27T15:53:23-06:002018-04-27T15:53:23-06:00By Patricia H Kushlis Let me get this straight. President Trump is planning to renege on the Iran nuclear deal but is pressing all steam ahead on a perhaps nuclear deal with North Korea. Is that correct? Something doesn’t compute....Patricia H. Kushlis<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><p><strong>By Patricia H Kushlis</strong></p>
<p>Let me get this straight.</p>
<p>President Trump is planning to renege on the Iran nuclear deal but is pressing all steam ahead on a perhaps nuclear deal with North Korea. Is that correct?</p>
<p>Something doesn’t compute.</p>
<p>Look, I have no objection to settling the decades old conflict on the Korean Peninsula between North and South. The South Koreans refused to sign the armistice in the 1950s so a new approach seems to be way past time; and it’s good to see the two Koreas themselves take the initiative.</p>
<p><strong>Good time to talk </strong></p>
<p>Besides, the North just managed to destroy the mountain which they had been using to test nuclear weapons so it will take them time to adjust to a nuclear reality without their former test site. They likely have completed a testing cycle anyway so now is as good a time to talk – as opposed to test - as any. Whether they can actually pull this off is another chapter in the never-ending Korean Peninsula saga. I hope they can.</p>
<p><strong>But why renege on the Iran nuclear deal? </strong></p>
<p>But why renege on the multinational Iran nuclear deal which has been in place for a year and to which the Iranians are complying. Well, it seems to me there are two likely reasons:</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">1) it was negotiated under the Obama administration and Trump had demonstrated time and again his determination to eliminate all that the Obama Administration accomplished and if a deal included more than two parties then all the more reason to forget it; and</p>
<p style="padding-left: 30px;">2) it’s all about oil and Trump’s fawning relationship with the Saudis especially King Mohammed Bin Salman.</p>
<p>In this case, I’m betting on oil and fealty to Salman. The former explanation seems like thin icing on the cake.</p>
<p>Think about it. The first place Trump stopped on his inaugural trip to Europe and the Middle East in late May 2017 was Riyadh where he was widely photographed stroking some kind of weird mystical greenish colored orb and blaming Iran for most of the problems in the Middle East.</p>
<p>He then went on to Israel to convene with Netanyahu, who also hates Iran, and finally Brussels for a NATO heads of state meeting. Later he sided with Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Egypt against the mostly Shiia Qatari government in a spat over funding terrorism.</p>
<p>The major problem for the US is that Qatar houses an important US military base in the Middle East. The only other problem is that it puts the US even more firmly on the Sunni side in this multi-centuries old religious conflict when the issue of funding terrorists is certainly as much an issue for the Saudis as it is the Shiia Iranians. In fact, much of the Sunni-Shiia rancor and ensuing violence is foremost targeted at each other in particular the two largest protagonists Saudi Arabia and Iran. Siding with the Saudis also inserts the US into the seemingly never-ending Yemen civil war that began with a botched intelligence raid shortly after Trump became president to Trump’s more recent attempts at playing peacemaker.</p>
<p><strong>So what about oil?</strong></p>
<p>The price of oil is not rock bottom but it has been higher. Saudi controls OPEC but Iran is a competitor and as international sanctions are removed on Iran the more Iranian oil hits the markets and the price per barrel for all oil producers declines. This is also a problem for states like Russia which is highly dependent upon the sale of fossil fuels internationally as well.</p>
<p>Of course, the development of alternative energy sources would resolve the Middle East and Russian oil dependency question, but American oil companies too have a stake in continued reliance on high global oil and gas prices which is why, from Trump’s perspective, Rex Tillerson with his friendly relations with the Saudis and the Russians, made a logical pick for Secretary of State. When his appointment did not turn out the way Trump had expected, he dumped him and turned to Pompeo. But Trump had also inserted his son-in-law Jared Kushner into the diplomatic stew.</p>
<p>Now that Kushner has been denied a security clearance and the continuing drumbeat of his questionable relations with Russians and Russian money laundering associated with the Kremlin, he seems to be less and less identified as Trump’s number one go-to guy for solving all the world’s problems – or even the Middle East’s thorny bramble thicket. In fact, he has almost disappeared from sight.</p>
<p>With Pompeo on the job less than a week, I see that he has been tapped to venture in that direction. Since Trump really has no Middle East foreign policy or clue as to solving the jigsaw puzzle known as the Middle East, perhaps Pompeo can fashion and implement one. Just as long as he bows, kowtows or genuflects appropriately to the green orb, the Kremlin’s double eagle and the unhinged occupant of the White House. </p>
<p> </p></div><div class="feedflare">
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</div><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/typepad/WhirledView/~4/Zwb0ynPBpLs" height="1" width="1" alt=""/>https://whirledview.typepad.com/whirledview/2018/04/north-korea-iran-and-other-thoughts-on-trumps-approach-to-nuclear-proliferation-deals.htmlA Not-So-Golden Shower of Missilestag:typepad.com,2003:post-6a00d834515f8469e201b8d2ebd6b1970c2018-04-18T05:00:00-06:002018-04-18T12:51:28-06:00Trump’s missile strike turned out to be as successful as the Obama/Russia negotiations which also failed to rid Syria of chemical weapons. What an irony!Patricia Lee Sharpe<div xmlns="http://www.w3.org/1999/xhtml"><p><strong>By Patricia Lee Sharpe</strong></p>
<p>Donald Trump’s greatest triumph re Syria last weekend was probably the feat of roping the Brits and the French into a fireworks show that didn’t accomplish much.</p>
<p>Let’s begin with the positives.</p>
<p>1. The coordination was impressive. Missiles rained in from all directions and they hit their targets. As good as the Rockettes at their Christmas best!</p>
<p>2. What’s more the hail of incoming wasn’t intercepted by an effective missile defense. This, unfortunately, could mean two things. The defenders lacked the capacity to protect the targeted sites—or they chose not to, thus cannily not betraying the full force of their defensive capacity, given the relative insignificance of the sites at risk.</p>
<p>3. Meanwhile, always a good thing: there wasn’t much “collateral damage” in the way of civilians killed. This could be understood in several ways. The strikes were artfully selected and targeted. Or the people normally on site were evacuated. Or the sites, no longer of critical importance, had been largely abandoned anyway. Also to the good, moreover, none of the losses were Russians, the potential killing of whom had much occupied the planners of the strike.</p>
<p>In sum, the NATO trio had reinforced stern warnings with dramatic, highly visible action, and although the results might have been better, they might also have been much worse.</p>
<p>Does this "mission accomplished" mean that a consistent, coherent, long term Syrian strategy has now been put in place? Evidently not. The strike had all the appearance of a caper designed to allow Donald Trump to distract critics, impress the base and allow the impresario-in-chief to take a bow. So let’s examine the three stages of the latest Trump “reality show.”</p>
<p>1. First came the promotion, the days and days of audience-building by bluster and hype. And oh! the suspense! Will he or won’t he?</p>
<p>2. Then came the performance, the rain of missiles, which hit their targets. A great show! “Fire and fury,” initially obscuring the sad futility.</p>
<p>3. Finally came the victory lap, the epic boasting, the strutting, the exaggeration of effect: “A perfectly executed strike last night!” True enough. But the further claim that the American-led strikes had taken the “heart” out of Syria’s chemical weapons program was already being contradicted by Pentagon officials who conceded that Bashar al-Assad probably retained the capacity to slaughter many more Syrians with chemical agents whenever he saw the need.</p>
<p>In short, Trump’s missile strike turned out to be as successful as the Obama/Russia negotiations which also failed to rid Syria of chemical weapons. What an irony!</p></div><div class="feedflare">
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</div><img src="http://feeds.feedburner.com/~r/typepad/WhirledView/~4/id0ExVQQpfI" height="1" width="1" alt=""/>https://whirledview.typepad.com/whirledview/2018/04/a-not-so-golden-shower-of-missiles.html